1. Tyler Farrar uses a fan’s bike and shoes at Tour Down Under

What do you do if you have a crash with no team mates or team cars around you? Well, you wait and hope you don’t lose too much time…unless you’ve had your mechanical next to the friendliest cycling fan in Australia.

But that’s not all. Farrar had different cleats to the ones needed for Tooman’s De Rosa – so he took his shoes as well! Tooman was given a lift in the broom wagon to the collect his bike and shoes at the end of the stage and was even given a full Dimension Data kit for his trouble. Chapeau!

Thomas won by just four seconds from seven-time Grand Tour winner Alberto Contador, after the Spaniard came second on the final stage to take six bonus seconds, but a gutsy ride from the Team Sky man saw him take the biggest win of his career.

4. Fabian Cancellara hits the deck at Paris-Roubaix

Fabian Cancellara was chasing a record-equalling fourth Paris-Roubaix win, which would have tied him with Tom Boonen and Roger de Vlaeminck for most wins in the Hell of the North.

Alas, it was not to be. Spartacus went down hard on one of the merciless stretches of pave (possibly due to an oil spill) along the route and eventually finished down in 40th position, the first time he had finished off the podium since his 49th place in 2009.

World champion Peter Sagan somehow bunny hopped over the sprawled Cancellara and carried on riding – it didn’t help him much though, as he only managed to finish in 11th.

5. Peter Sagan’s Belgian double

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WXqibIXINcM

It seems ridiculous in hindsight, but in the third week in March it seemed like the curse of the rainbow jersey had skipped a year and saved up all its bad luck for Peter Sagan.

Contador trailed Henao by six seconds going into the sixth and final stage, a 16.5km time trial around Eibar, but the Tinkoff rider put in a masterful display to take the stage win and the general classification, beating Quintana by five seconds and Henao by 18 seconds on the day, prompting El Pistolero to rethink his retirement plans.

8. Sky win first Monument at rain-soaked Liège-Bastogne-Liège

It was by no means the most exciting edition of La Doyenne, but the 102nd edition of Liège-Bastogne-Liège marked Team Sky’s first-ever Monument victory after six years of trying.

But one of the biggest stories of the day was the awful weather that afflicted the race from the first kilometres, leading to race being redirected between kilometre 45 and 75 of the original route which saw several riders sacrifice aerodynamics for warmth.

9. Chris Froome takes a stage from the breakaway

Well, here’s something you don’t see every day – the two-time Tour de France champion winning a stage from the breakaway (just don’t expect to see it in France in July!).

But Froome’s resiliance came to the fore two days later as he took stage four in impressive fashion, chasing down the early break alongside Tejay can Garderen, before he rode away to take the win by four seconds from the group of GC contenders, led by Ion Izagirre and Thibaut Pinot.

10. Steven Kruijswijk’s crash ends his Giro d’Italia dream

It was all set up for the underdog to win the Giro d’Italia, but Steven Kruijswijk moment of misfortune saw his dreams slip away.

Leading the general classification by three minutes with three stages to go, the LottoNL-Jumbo rider crashed at the top of the descent from the Colle dell’Agnello and saw his rivals take advantage.

He lost his maglia rosa that day and then on the final mountain stage he suffered further, slipping off the podium completely.

11. The Critérium du Dauphiné’s mountain prologue

Talk about a tough way to start a race. The route planners of the Critérium du Dauphiné decided to mix things up a little bit this year with a monstrous mountain prologue in Les Gets.

It was only four kilometres long, but with gradients of over 20 per cent in places it wasn’t for the faint hearted. Luckily the organisers waived the normal time limit, meaning those chaps not designed for sprinting up mountains wouldn’t have been eliminated at the first hurdle.

Chris Froome put up a formidable time of just shy of 12 minutes, but that was smashed by first Richie Porte and then Alberto Contador to take the first yellow jersey.

12. Mark Cavendish takes yellow at the Tour de France

As remarkable as Mark Cavendish’s Tour de France palmares was heading into the 2016 race, he’d never won the first stage to wear yellow.

That all changed in Normandy on July 2 as Cav defied the odds to beat all in front of him to win at Utah Beach and take the race lead. It was also the first time that Cavendish had beaten Marcel Kittel in a sprint, also pipping Peter Sagan and Andre Greipel to the line.

Cavendish’s stint in yellow was only to last one day, but he went on to win three more stages to take his Tour tally to 30.

13. Chris Froome and Peter Sagan attack in the crosswinds

Who said Chris Froome was boring and defensive? In the crosswinds on a stage supposedly for the sprinters, Froome and Peter Sagan stormed off the front of the peloton in the final kilometres in one of the most remarkable moments in recent Tour history.

Froome in the yellow jersey, joined by Sky teammate Geraint Thomas; Sagan in the green, joined by Tinkoff teammate Maciej Bodnar. The four of them worked hard in the wind to open up an advantage over the rest of the peloton.

Sagan eventually won the stage and although Froome only took six seconds on his rivals in the end it was the mental blow as much as the physical one that affected the other riders in the GC.

14. Chris Froome runs up Mont Ventoux

The most unforgettable image from the 2016 Tour de France doesn’t even have a bike in it. Having crashed into the back of a motorbike that was held up by the huge crowds on Mont Ventoux, Froome was forced to run up the fabled climb until his team car could reach him with a new bike.

It was a trot that inspired countless memes on Twitter, got Sir Dave Brailsford crying with laughter and almost ended Froome’s Tour hopes.

Fortunately for the Sky man, the commissaires decided to award him the same time as Bauke Mollema, who got up from the crash and sped off to the finish line.

15. Chris Froome wins his third Tour de France

Froome got the beers in on stage 21 having all-but sealed his third Tour victory. The yellow jersey had a few bottles of beer in his back pockets for all his teammates on the processional ride to Paris, but it was the moment his crossed the finish line on the Champs-Élysées that will last long in the memory.

Flanked once again by his teammates – all eight of who made it to Paris – Froome looked a little emotional as he wrote another chapter of sporting history.

Immediately being greeted by his wife and young son was a lovely moment and his speech on the podium, while scripted, was pretty decent for once.

16. Greg Van Avermaet wins the men’s Olympic Games road race

Everyone thought the Olympic Games road race would be fought out between the peloton’s best climbers. Chris Froome, Alejandro Valverde and Vincenzo Nibali were all present for the mountainous circuit, but it was a Classics specialist who rode away with the gold.

Peter Sagan had already said the route didn’t suit him, but he may have regretted that when he saw Greg Van Avermaet on top of the podium. The Belgian kept pace with the climbers along the route, which started and finished at Fort Copacabana, to beat Jakob Fuglsang to the line.

He had fellow Colombian Rigoberto Uran for company in the final kilometres, along with Diego Rosa and Romain Bardet. The sensible money was on Uran, who possessed the best sprint of the four, but Chaves was having none of it.

Rosa played his cards too early, attacking twice in the final three kilometres, while Chaves just sat in the wheels and moved around Rosa at the very last to claim the famous win.

19. Amalie Dideriksen upsets the Dutch at the World Championships

With a world-class team working together to drive Kirsten Wild to the line in Doha, it wasn’t hard to pick a favourite in the women’s road race at the World Championships.

And heading into the final kilometre with a strong lead-out train, Wild looked certain to take the rainbow stripes. But Denmark’s Amalie Dideriksen, with only two teammates for company on the day, upset the odds by sprinting past Wild in the desert heat.

The 20-year-old is well versed at World Championships podium procedure, having won two successive junior titles in 2013 and 2014, and proved you don’t need a big team to win the rainbow jersey.

20. Peter Sagan upsets the Belgians at the World Championships

It’s like déja-vu. Like how Dideriksen upset the Dutch powerhouse, Peter Sagan trumped the Belgian dominance in the men’s road race.

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